anyone here using Jekyll on Github as a blog platform and knows how to make syntax highlighting work? I've enabled redcarpet as the MD renderer but it wont highlight at all
btw, consider that the output is crappy because my low CSS skills and tolerance for anything design-related make me itch each time I reach some "nice-looking" results
Vampires are mythological or folkloric beings who subsist by feeding on the life essence (generally in the form of blood) of living creatures, regardless of whether they are undead or a living person/being.
Although vampiric entities have been recorded in many cultures, and may go back to "prehistoric times", the term vampire was not popularized until the early 18th century, after an influx of vampire superstition into Western Europe from areas where vampire legends were frequent, such as the Balkans and Eastern Europe, although local variants were also known by different names, suc...
@andho liquid tags is what pygments/jekyll uses. something like { highlight: php } which is not what I want because that's not markdown. I'd like to use the same md flavor that github uses. when i view my MD posts in GH, they are highlighted correctly. but when I view them in the blog processed by Jekyll, they are just plain
@Gordon i don't use liquid tags, just rst with ..code directive, but that's not what you want. So how do you specify the language when using backticks?
@Gordon is your site generated by github? I didn't know that. The Octopress website said you have to render on your own, so i didn't check it. Anyway, if Github renders it, it should have the highlighting. I don't know
@hakre FYI plugin 0.20 lets you just post delv-pls, anyone running the plugin will see it as cv-pls if the question is still open, then it will change to delv when it gets closed, and it wont consider it complete until it is deleted.
@PeeHaa Indeed, we'll just ping the API once an hour to refresh the current user's data. Could present an issue with the transcript, IIRC there's nothing static in the DOM to identify the currently logged in user ID in transcript (related to the reason it doesn't work as it is), let me double check that though
@NullPointer We might as well just hide the post if you can't do anything about it, although yes that could work as well, I'll see how easy it is to hide a post without screwing up the rest of the site styles
@AshwinMukhija Coincidentally, I pretend I'm writing Java when I write OO PHP, starting out as if the engine will bollock you for mixing types is a lot safer in the long run
can't be. github pages uses whatever renderer is set in the page repo right. But github uses it's own renderer. Notice the Travis status thingy on the repos.
But you said you were using github flavored markdown and it's works locally? That would mean that bug you showed is different right
@andho i dont have a local installation. ruby wont compile all the gems properly. like i said: viewing the md files in the repo: highlights correctly. same files in gh-pages: doesnt work.
@Gordon nah, if it works locally, it will work on gh pages. But you will have to integrate the github-markdown in your repo. So you won't know if it works or not if you can't test it locally
if you can integrate it, i'd be more than willing to test it
actually i could test your current repo and let you know
@PeeHaa Because it is completely superfluous when writing classes. I am completely on board with that one, my fingers regularly omit it, it would be nice if the engine caught up.
@PeeHaa You really can't see any benefit/can see harm in allowing them to be omitted? What good are they really doing there? They're obviously methods, they have code in them. There's no chance of you confusing them with something else as you are reading them, and it brings it more into like with other similarly syntaxed languages. /runs away
@All Any question that's basically a "fix my code question" and has a poorly worded title - along the lines of "why isn't my code working" - this wont be helpful to future visitors. Do I flag as off-topic, not constructive or too localised? I'm pulling for too localised but not sure :)
I'm running Debian (Lenny).
When I run this:
curl --ssl https://www.google.com
I get this error:
curl: (60) SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate
More details here: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
curl performs SSL certificate verification by default, using ...
@shredding Seriously, check whether the PEM really does exist in the place that you are specifying (echo out the path, check file_exists(), is_readable() etc). Also (if you have been testing on Windows), remember that your *nix filesystem is almost certainly case-sensitive.
@shredding Interesting, it seems like the cert file is not valid then. Have you tried simply re-uploading it? How did you transfer the file, via FTP? if so make sure you use binary mode transfer (although admittedly that shouldn't really make a difference for PEM formatted certs, I wonder if cURL is throwing up because the file uses \n line endings instead of \r\n)
@shredding Just a hex dump of the cert that you have on your server, to verify that it really is the same as the one you linked (which I presume is working elsewhere)?
@andho not what I want then. I will use this mainly from my windows box and I dont want ruby on it. besides, even if I wanted it wouldnt work because of the gems
Hey guys, when I have some spare time I'm thinking of putting one of my projects over on Github that I've worked on in the past - It's currently awful code, but I'll re-write it and then upload it. Was wondering if anyone's interested :)
It's a multipurpose application - custom-built in-browser transmission client GUI for downloading videos (legitimate, for educational purposes of course), a global queue for FFMPEG conversions in the background with percentage completion, and then in-browser viewer :)